Doesn’t this only work if the logic of the situation is transparent? Or maybe I’m misunderstanding what you mean by the logic of the situation. Are you trying to say “Keep in mind the counterfactual situations in which you might make various decisions and then determine which situation you are in?”
Or maybe “determine your policy in all statistically likely scenarios then determine which scenario you are in”
If I believed this to be true I think I would take your position. But because you would not change your mind if you believed this was false I too, do not believe this counts as the crux of our disagreement.
I’ll give it a shot this time. My proposed crux is that much of what we believe about the causes of poverty (crime… ect. ) are likely false in such a way that we are completely missing something conceptual in our models (including the one you stated above) or the causes are more powerful than our greatest operational intitutions can influence. (Age, genetics, ect)